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Journal Article

Citation

Laham S, Potvin M, Schrader K, Marino I. Drug Chem. Toxicol. 1980; 3(4): 343-360.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1980, Dekker)

DOI

10.3109/01480548009030125

PMID

7215196

Abstract

Biological effects of a single exposure to moderate or high concentrations of 2-propanol were investigated in Sprague-Dawley rats. Acute toxicity (LC50, t:8 hours) of this widely used solvent was determined and found to be 19000 ppm (17380-20760 ppm) for females and 22500 ppm (19200-26400 ppm) for males. Determination of blood levels of 2-propanol and its metabolite, acetone, was carried out during and after a single 4-hour exposure (Concentration range: 500 to 8000 ppm). The amount of acetone and 2-propanol was directly related to the various air concentrations of alcohol inhaled. Increase of exposure time to 8 hours enhanced considerably the amount of blood acetone which could be determined even 20 hours after exposure. These findings indicate a slow conversion of this alcohol to acetone which can be used as biochemical indicator to exposure. Histopathological examination of rats exposed to high levels of 2-propanol shows typical lesions of chemical pneumonitis and pulmonary edema accompanied by foamy vacuolization of liver cells and severe focal cytoplasmic degradation.


Language: en

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